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Board awards felony indigent-defense cases, commissioners call for review of eligibility process

July 14, 2025 | Walla Walla County, Washington


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Board awards felony indigent-defense cases, commissioners call for review of eligibility process
The Wallowa County Board of Commissioners on July 14 approved contracting adjustments to reassign 100 felony cases following the resignation notice from one indigent defense attorney. Commissioner Clayton moved to award 75 additional felony cases to Ashley Kohlberg and 25 to Julie Carlson Stroud and asked the clerk to prepare contract amendments; the motion was seconded and passed 3-0.

Background and vote: The county's administrative presenter said Julie Carlson Stroud provided the required 90 days' notice relinquishing 100 felony cases; two currently contracted attorneys responded to the RFQ and requested the additional cases. "So I'm just requesting approval from the Board to award the cases, as mentioned, to each attorney and then approval to work on amending their current contract to add those felony cases," the presenter said. The board approved the award and instructed the clerk to prepare contract amendments.

Wider discussion and why it matters: Commissioners discussed the high and growing cost of indigent defense for the county. Commissioner Clayton said indigent defense costs are one of the county's highest expenditures and that while the U.S. Constitution guarantees the right to counsel, the county lacks a centralized administrative mechanism to screen and document indigency consistently. "I recommend that we convene a group of stakeholders to map out the current state of the qualification process and make some recommendations for improvement," Commissioner Clayton said. He and other commissioners said such a stakeholder group could include a judge, a public defender, the director of court services and administrative staff to recommend standardized screening, possible creation of an administrator role to oversee contracts, and data collection to protect taxpayer stewardship.

Decision vs. next steps: The immediate action was limited to awarding cases and preparing contract amendments. Commissioners expressed support for convening a stakeholder group to analyze the indigency-screening process and report back; no formal resolution to create that group was adopted at this meeting.

Ending: The board approved the contract awards 3-0 and asked staff to explore a standardized indigency screening process and potential administrative oversight for indigent defense going forward.

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